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MEDADO,
PETITIONER. (CASE DIGEST)
Digests
IN RE: PETITION TO SIGN IN THE ROLL OF ATTORNEYS MICHAEL A.
MEDADO, PETITIONER. (DIGEST)
B.M. No. 2540
TOPIC:
Admission to the Bar, Unauthorized Practice of Law, Canon 9, Signing of
the Roll of Attorneys
FACTS:
Michael A. Medado passed the Philippine bar exams in 1979. On 7 May
1980, he took the Attorney’s Oath at the PICC. He was scheduled to sign
in the Roll of Attorneys on 13 May 1980, but failed to do so allegedly
because he had misplaced the Notice to Sign the Roll of Attorneys. Several
years later, while rummaging through his things, he found said Notice. He
then realized that he had not signed in the roll, and that what he had signed
at the entrance of the PICC was probably just an attendance record.
He thought that since he already took the oath, the signing of the Roll of
Attorneys was not as important. The matter of signing in the Roll of
Attorneys was subsequently forgotten.
About seven years later, in 2012, Medado filed the instant Petition, praying
that he be allowed to sign in the Roll of Attorneys. Medado justifies this
lapse by characterizing his acts as “neither willful nor intentional but based
on a mistaken belief and an honest error of judgment.
The Office of the Bar Confidant recommended that the instant petition be
denied for petitioner’s gross negligence, gross misconduct and utter lack
of merit, saying that petitioner could offer no valid justification for his
negligence in signing in the Roll of Attorneys.
ISSUE:
Whether or not petitioner may be allowed to sign the Roll of Attorneys.
RULING:
Yes, the Supreme Court granted the petition subject to the payment of a
fine and the imposition of a penalty equivalent to suspension from the
practice of law.
However, Medado is not free from all liability for his years of inaction.
Medado may have at first operated under an honest mistake of fact when
he thought that what he had signed at the PICC entrance before the oath-
taking was already the Roll of Attorneys. However, the moment he realized
that what he had signed was just an attendance record, he could no longer
claim an honest mistake of fact as a valid justification. At that point, he
should have known that he was not a full-fledged member of the Philippine
Bar, as it was the act of signing therein that would have made him so.
When, in spite of this knowledge, he chose to continue practicing law, he
willfully engaged in the unauthorized practice of law.
Knowingly engaging in unauthorized practice of law likewise transgresses
Canon 9 of the Code of Professional Responsibility. At the heart of Canon
9 is the lawyer’s duty to prevent the unauthorized practice of law. This duty
likewise applies to law students and Bar candidates. As aspiring members
of the Bar, they are bound to conduct themselves in accordance with the
ethical standards of the legal profession.